The Greatest Story Ever Told (The Lawrence Arms album)

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The Greatest Story Ever Told
File:The Lawrence Arms - The Greatest Story Ever Told cover.jpg
Studio album by The Lawrence Arms
Released September 23, 2003
Genre Punk rock
Length 33:11
Label Fat Wreck Chords
Producer Matt Allison and The Lawrence Arms
The Lawrence Arms chronology
Apathy and Exhaustion
(2002)Apathy and Exhaustion2002
The Greatest Story Ever Told
(2003)
Cocktails & Dreams
(2005)Cocktails & Dreams2005
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars [1]

The Greatest Story Ever Told is the studio album by the American punk rock band The Lawrence Arms, released in 2003 by Fat Wreck Chords. A concept album of sorts, it follows a linear storyline and has several songs which call back to or refer to others. The album includes exhaustive liner notes with footnotes to the lyrics that detail the many literary and pop culture references of the lyrics. Its title is a direct reference to the movie The Greatest Story Ever Told, a 1965 film about the life of Jesus.

Track listing

All songs written by The Lawrence Arms

  1. "Introduction: The Ramblin' Boys of Pleasure Sing the Hobo Clown Chorus" - 0:26
  2. "The Raw and Searing Flesh" - 3:07
  3. "On With the Show" - 1:29
  4. "Drunk Mouth Kitchen Smile" - 2:26
  5. "Alert the Audience!" - 2:16
  6. "Fireflies" - 3:54
  7. "The March of the Elephants" - 1:28
  8. "Chapter 13: The Hero Appears" - 2:50
  9. "Hesitation Station" - 1:43
  10. "The Revisionist" - 3:19
  11. "The Ramblin' Boys of Pleasure" - 2:44
  12. "A Wishful Puppeteer" - 2:11
  13. "The Disaster March" - 3:51
  14. "Outro: Hobo Reprise" - 8987:27

Performers

Album information

  • Record label: Fat Wreck Chords
  • Recorded and mixed in June 2003 at Atlas Studios by Matt Allison
  • Produced by Matt Allison and the Lawrence Arms
  • Mastered at West West Side Mastering by Alan Douches
  • All songs by the Lawrence Arms
  • Art direction and layout by David Holtz
  • Photography by Hiro Tanaka and Ben Pier
  • Footnotes by Chris McCaughan and Brendan Kelly

Cultural references

In the liner notes and artwork the band members identify themselves under false names and as playing instruments not found on the album, specifically Gordon Shumway on vibraslap, Ivan Nikolayevich on harp and lyre, and Ferdinand Magellan on bassoon. The names are references to history, literature and pop culture:

They also fictitiously list several other famous figures as "additional musicians", including musician John Oates, actors Bronson Pinchot and Ian Ziering, poet Ezra Pound and former President Chester A. Arthur. In reality, the music on the album is performed by the band's actual line-up of Chris McCaughan, Brendan Kelly and Neil Hennessy, with a few additional musicians who are friends and relatives of the band.

The Master and Margarita

Russian author Mikhail Bulgakov's novel The Master and Margarita is referred to several times: the album has a song called "Chapter 13: The Hero Appears", named after the same chapter in the book; its liner notes name one of the band members (corresponding to guitarist Chris McCaughan) as Ivan Nikolayevich; the song "A Wishful Puppeteer" includes the lyric "text to burn" in reference to Bulkagov's combustion of an early draft of the book and other works; and the liner notes' back page features the same quote from Faust that prefaces the novel.

Quotations

In addition to the numerous historical, literary and cultural references made in the album's lyrics, the inside back cover of the liner notes bears a pair of quotations designed to illustrate the album's juxtaposition of "legitimate" literature and philosophy with American pop culture:

  • "Who are thou, then?"

"Part of that Power which eternally wills evil and eternally works good."
-from Goethe's Faust (also prefaces The Master and Margarita, which as noted above is referenced elsewhere in the album)

  • "Everything was fine until dickless here cut off the power grid!"

"Is this true?"
"Yes, your honor, this man has no dick."
-Bill Murray in Ghostbusters

References